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Focus Groups in a Medicine-Dominated Field: Compromises or Quality Improvements?
Author(s) -
Marit Solbjør,
Wenche Østerlie,
JohnArne Skolbekken,
Ann Rudinow Sætnan,
Siri Forsmo
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
international journal of qualitative methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.414
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 1609-4069
DOI - 10.1177/160940690700600305
Subject(s) - focus group , qualitative research , field (mathematics) , mammography , discipline , medical research , focus (optics) , quality (philosophy) , medical education , research design , psychology , engineering ethics , sociology , medicine , breast cancer , social science , epistemology , cancer , pathology , engineering , physics , mathematics , anthropology , pure mathematics , optics , philosophy
Mammography screening has traditionally been viewed as a field for medical research. The medical science discourse, however, is highly quantitative, and its claims for validity somewhat opposed to those of qualitative research. To communicate research in a cross-disciplinary field, it is necessary to adapt one's research to several paradigms. The authors conducted focus group interviews with women due to be screened in a national breast cancer screening program. Their prospective design, both strategic and random sampling, and free discussions during focus groups are all questions of satisfying a medical science discourse in the frames of qualitative research. Focus group research showed itself adaptable through the data collection phase in a cross-disciplinary research project on mammography screening

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